PDF Download , by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

PDF Download , by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn


, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn


PDF Download , by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

Product details

File Size: 2539 KB

Print Length: 1042 pages

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; Reprint edition (August 19, 2014)

Publication Date: August 19, 2014

Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B00ID9Q02M

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#574,754 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

This is the second volume of Solzhenitsyn's epic "The Red Wheel" and, unlike "August 1914", this book focuses more on Russian society than the war. A number of the same characters return from the first work and Solzhenitsyn takes them, and the reader, to the parlors of St. Petersburg, the homes of Moscow, the trenches, the schools, the factories, the farms, and the legislative assemblies. It is an astonishing work, capturing the mood in Russia before chaos consumed her and showing the last days of a failing society.There are some flaws. Solzhenitsyn continues using the "camera eye" technique that he used in the first novel and, again, does not quite succeed with it. He is better in his use of newspaper headlines than he was in "August 1914." Where he truly fails though is in the numerous essays he includes giving the history of political parties, legislative leaders, even transcripts from the Duma debates. It is a bit too much and Solzhenitsyn is not particularly subtle in his contempt for progressives and society.Where Solzhenitsyn excels is when his characters dominate the narrative. Above all, the powers of redemption and love flow through the book despite the chaos, despite the coming Soviet horror. There are scenes that remain with the reader: a priest and a young officer talking about faith in the trenches; a colonel who comes to St. Petersburg to make a major political impact only to have it undermined by his attraction to a woman, a woman going to confession crying over her dead child, a writer on a train and his assorted notes and musings. This is an epic book to be sure but Solzhenitsyn is truly incredible when he describes the intimate moments of daily life.Be warned. While the book was translated in English a decade ago, the last two volumes have yet to be translated. Despite the book going on for 1,000 pages and a difficult read, you will want more. "The Red Wheel" is not for everyone but those who pursue it will find one of the greatest novels written in the last half of the twentieth century.

Since I've never had the energy to read Trotsky (although I've read Deutscher's biography of him), this is the most detailed account I've ever read of the Russian Revolution and the circumstances that led up to it. Solzhenitsyn's main protagonist, Colonel Vorotyntsev, is a soldier on the front in the Balkans. For most of the novel he goes on leave to Moscow and Petersburg, trying to understand why the war is being managed so badly and to find the people in charge and make some improvements.Solzhenitsyn covers almost all of European Russian society in his book, from peasants in the army and on leave, up to the muddled Nicholas II. (A friend of mine who had been for many years a member of the American Communist Party, when I mentioned Solzhenitsyn, roared, "That bastard wants to bring back the Tsar." From reading this book, I think that not likely.) Rasputin, I'm vulgarly sorry to say, never makes an appearance, except as "Our Friend" in the atrocious gossipy, malicious letters that the Tsaritsa (known to all Solzhenitsyn's Russians as "Alix") writes to her husband. Solzhenitsyn--we can guess--has no sympathy for Lenin, but he attempts to get inside that man's head and life--and shows him practically as a dupe of Helphand. The Duma comes off as a useless debating society in which it is more important to top the previous speaker than to make effective change. The Kadets--short for "Constitutional Democrats"--which might have been the stable democratic center that Nabokov admired (his father was a high-ranking Kadet) come across as wishy-washy and unable to resist being opportunists pulled by the historically powerful Left (Social Democrats, and the occasional Social Revolutionary.) The only good politician in Solzhenitsyn's estimation, as far as I can tell, is Stolypin.I hope the shorthand recounting of the book's historical matters doesn't put the reader off. Here's Russian history written by an interested Russian and an undeniably great writer, and though I liked some parts of the book better than others, I was never bored by it. Nor will you be. Obviously you should read 1914 first.

This is the second in the series and although the books are long, if you love history and want to understand the Russian revolution these are for you. I recommend starting with August 1914 which vividly describes the heroism of the Russian soldier who is so miserably led into a botched invasion of Germany. Solzhenitsyn is masterful in his bringing his characters to life from soldiers enduring the horrors of WW I on the Eastern front to the revolutionaries who are slowly pulling Russia from the frying pan into the fire. I found myself flying through both books and was saddened to see them end. Looking forward to starting the final book to see how the characters I've grown so attached to wind up when the bottom finally falls out. This is the modern War and Peace.

Unless one is a professional reviewer or critic, it is hard to summarize Solzhenitsyn's second volume (of three) in the Red Wheel. (The original Russian has five volumes, the English translation is 'abridged" into three.) Reading Solzhenitsyn is like being swept along in a tidal wave of history, personal history, dramatic story, poetry, commentary, and analysis. There is no point in fighting Solzhenitsyn's surge of energy, love, and sorrow about Russia, its peoples, its history, its glory and corruption. No words of mine can convey adequately the experience of simply reading this book.it will take you some time--it's 1,000 pages long--but I thought my time was well-spent and my horizons expanded enormously.I'm sort of on a Solzhenitsyn jag right now. I've read the Gulag Archipelago, One Day in the Life, and the first volume of this trilogy. The third volume and the Cancer War are on my to-read table. I also read a good historical compilation of Solzhenitsyn's work, The Soul and Barbed Wire, which has given me some perspective on Solzhenitsyn's life and writing.

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